Asylum Law Firm Houston

What is the 180-day Asylum EAD Clock?

The “180-day Asylum EAD Clock” measures the time period during which an asylum application has been pending with the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) asylum office and/or the Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR). USCIS service centers adjudicate the Form I-765, Application for Employment Authorization, and use the 180-day Asylum EAD Clock to determine eligibility for employment authorization. Asylum applicants who applied for asylum on or after January 4, 1995, must
wait 150 days before they can file a Form I-765. USCIS cannot grant employment authorization for an additional 30 days, for a total 180-day waiting period. This 180-day Asylum EAD Clock does not include any delays that applicants request or cause while their applications are pending with an asylum office or immigration

What starts the 180-day Asylum EAD Clock?

For asylum applications first filed with an asylum office, USCIS calculates the 180-day Asylum EAD Clock starting on the date that a complete asylum application is received by USCIS, in the manner described by the Instructions to the Form I-589, Application for Asylum and for Withholding of Removal. If an asylum application is referred from the asylum office to EOIR, the applicant may continue to accumulate time toward employment authorization eligibility while the asylum application is pending before an immigration judge.

For asylum applications first filed with EOIR, USCIS calculates the 180-day Asylum EAD Clock in one of two ways:

1) If a complete asylum application is “lodged” with the immigration court, whether at the court window or by mail, the application will be stamped “lodged not filed” and the applicant will start to accumulate time toward eligibility for
employment authorization on the date of lodging, or
2) If the asylum application is not “lodged,” the applicant generally will start to accumulate time toward eligibility for employment authorization on the date that a complete asylum application is filed with the court, whether at a hearing, at the court window, or by mail.
Applicants who lodge an application at an immigration court window must still file the application at the court at a later date, whether at a hearing, at the court window, or by mail.

What stops the 180-day Asylum EAD Clock?

The 180-day Asylum EAD Clock does not include any delays requested or caused by an applicant while his or her asylum application is pending with USCIS and/or EOIR.

For cases pending with an asylum office:

Delays requested or caused by an applicant may include:
• A request to transfer a case to a new asylum office or interview location, including when the transfer is based on a new address;
• A request to reschedule an interview for a later date;
• Failure to appear at an interview or fingerprint appointment;
• Failure to provide a competent interpreter at an interview;
• A request to provide additional evidence after an interview; and
• Failure to receive and acknowledge an asylum decision in person (if required).
If an applicant is required to receive and acknowledge his or her asylum decision at an asylum office, but fails to appear, his or her 180-day Asylum EAD Clock will stop. It will not begin again until the first master calendar hearing with an immigration judge after the case is referred to EOIR.
If an applicant fails to appear for an asylum interview, the 180-day Asylum EAD Clock will stop on the date of the missed interview, and the applicant may be ineligible for employment authorization unless he or she sends a written request to the asylum office to reschedule the interview within 45 days and demonstrates “good cause” for missing the interview. A request to reschedule an interview with the asylum office that is made after 45 days from the missed interview must demonstrate “exceptional circumstances,” which is a higher standard than good cause. If the applicant has established exceptional circumstances for missing the asylum interview and is currently in removal proceedings before an immigration judge, the asylum office can reopen the asylum application and reschedule the applicant for an interview upon request by the applicant if the immigration judge dismisses the removal proceedings. If the asylum office determines that an applicant’s failure to appear for an interview was due to lack of notice of the interview appointment, the asylum office will not attribute a delay to the applicant and the asylum office will reschedule the interview.

For cases pending with EOIR:

Asylum cases pending with EOIR are adjudicated at hearings before an immigration judge. At the conclusion (or “adjournment”) of each hearing, the immigration judge will determine the reason for the adjournment. If the adjournment is requested or caused by the applicant, the applicant will stop accumulating time toward the 180-day Asylum EAD Clock until the next hearing. If the adjournment is attributed to the immigration court or the Department of Homeland Security, the applicant will continue accumulating time. For applicants whose release from detention automatically transfers their case to another hearing location, the clock runs until the date of the next hearing.
For example, an asylum applicant may stop accumulating time toward the 180-day Asylum EAD Clock if, at a hearing:
• The applicant asks for the case to be continued so he or she can get an attorney;
• The applicant or his or her attorney asks for additional time to prepare the case;
• The applicant or his or her attorney declines an expedited asylum hearing date; or
• The applicant requests or the parties jointly request administrative closure of the applicant’s case.
In addition, an asylum applicant may stop accumulating time between hearings if he or she files a motion that delays proceedings and the immigration judge grants the motion. For example, an applicant stops accumulating time when the immigration judge grants:
• A motion to change venue filed by the applicant; or
• A motion for a continuance filed by the applicant.
In such cases, the applicant stops accumulating time when the immigration judge grants the motion. The applicant may or may not begin to accumulate time again after the next hearing, depending on the reason for adjournment of the next hearing.
Further, the accumulation of time toward the 180-day Asylum EAD Clock stops on the date an immigration judge issues a decision on the asylum application. An applicant whose asylum application is denied before 180 days have elapsed on the 180-day Asylum EAD Clock will not be eligible for employment authorization. However, if the decision is appealed to the Board of Immigration
Appeals (Board) and the Board remands it (sends it back) to an immigration judge for adjudication of an asylum claim (including Board remands to an immigration judge following an appeal to a U.S. Court of Appeals), the applicant’s 180-day Asylum EAD Clock will be credited with the total number of days between the immigration judge’s decision and the date of the Board’s remand order.
The applicant will continue to accumulate time on the 180-day Asylum EAD Clock while the asylum claim is pending after the remand order, excluding any delays requested or caused by the applicant.

How do I find more information about the 180-day Asylum EAD Clock?

Asylum applicants in removal proceedings before EOIR may call the EOIR hotline at 1-800-898-7180 to obtain certain information about their 180-day Asylum EAD Clock. The EOIR hotline generally reports a calculation of the number of days between the date an asylum application was filed with an asylum office or an immigration court, and the date the immigration judge first issued a decision on the application, not including delays requested or caused by the applicant.
However, in some cases, an applicant may have accumulated more time on the 180-day Asylum EAD Clock than the number of days reported on the EOIR hotline.The number of days reported on the hotline does not include:
• The time an applicant accumulates toward the 180-day Asylum EAD Clock when the applicant has lodged an asylum
application with an court prior to filing the application with the court; or
• The time that USCIS may credit to an applicant’s 180-day Asylum EAD Clock if the asylum application was remanded to an immigration judge by the Board for further adjudication of an asylum claim.
To determine the number of days on an applicant’s 180-Day Asylum EAD Clock, an applicant may rely on the number of days reported by the EOIR hotline if the applicant has not lodged his or her application with an court, or if the asylum application was not remanded from the Board for further adjudication of an asylum claim.
Applicants who lodged an application with an immigration court should add the number of days between the date of lodging of the application and when the application was filed with the court (or the current date if the applicant has not yet filed the application).
Applicants whose cases were remanded from the Board for further adjudication of the asylum claim should add the number of days from the immigration judge’s initial decision on the asylum application to the date of the Board’s order remanding the case. These applicants continue to accumulate time toward the 180-day Asylum EAD Clock after the case is remanded, excluding delays requested or caused by the applicant. For more information on whether a delay is requested or caused by the applicant, please see the previous section.

What if I think there is an error in the calculation of time on my 180-Day Asylum EAD Clock?

For questions regarding time accumulated on the 180-day Asylum EAD Clock when an applicant’s asylum application is pending with an asylum office, please contact the 180-day Asylum EAD Clock point of contact at the asylum office with jurisdiction over the case. The points of contact can be found on the Asylum Division Web page at www.uscis.gov/Asylum under “Asylum Employment Authorization and Clock Contacts.”
For cases before EOIR, asylum applicants should address questions to the immigration judge during the hearing, or in writing to the court administrator. Applicants should not file motions related to the 180-day Asylum EAD Clock. If an applicant believes the issue has not been correctly addressed at the court level, the applicant may then contact the Assistant Chief Immigration Judge
for the appropriate immigration court in writing. For cases on appeal, applicants may contact EOIR’s Office of the General Counsel in writing.

What if I think there is an error in the adjudication of my Form I-765, Application for Employment
Authorization?

USCIS service centers adjudicate the Form I-765. Applicants may contact a USCIS service center through the National Customer Service Center hotline at 1-800-375-5283. Inquiries that cannot be resolved by a customer service representative will be routed to the service center where the Form I-765 was filed. Applicants should receive a response from the service center within 30 days. If more than 30 days pass without a response, applicants may email the appropriate USCIS service center at one of the following addresses:
California Service Center:csc-ncscfollowup@uscis.dhs.gov
Nebraska Service Center:nscfollowup.ncsc@uscis.dhs.gov
Potomac Service Center:psc.ncscfollowup@uscis.dhs.gov
Texas Service Center:tsc.ncscfollowup@uscis.dhs.gov
Vermont Service Center:vsc.ncscfollowup@uscis.dhs.gov
If applicants do not receive an email response from the service center address above within 21 days, applicants may email the USCIS Headquarters Office of Service Center Operations at SCOPSSCATA@uscis.dhs.gov.
What is the ABT Settlement Agreement?
On November 4, 2013, the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington approved a revised settlement agreement in the class action litigation B.H., et al. v. USCIS, et al., also referred to as the ABT Settlement Agreement. Under the terms of the ABT Settlement Agreement, USCIS and EOIR agreed to change certain practices related to asylum cases and the calculation of time for
employment authorization eligibility.
The ABT Settlement Agreement has a separate review process for asylum applicants who believe they have not received relief described in the ABT Settlement Agreement. Applicants who believe they have been denied relief under the Agreement should consult the ABT Settlement Agreement and associated documents, and follow the Individual ABT Claim Review process described in the Agreement to resolve their claims. For more information about the ABT Settlement Agreement, visit www.uscis.gov orwww.justice.gov/eoir.
How do I apply for work authorization?
For instructions on how to apply for employment authorization, visit the USCIS website at www.uscis.gov/i-765 and see the Instructions to Form I-765, Application for Employment Authorization or contact our office for assistance at (281)-809-5599.

This article is provided for information purposes. Should you have any questions or be interested to learn more about this topic, contact Immigration Attorney Claudine Umuhire Gasana at claudine@cugasanalaw.com or call us at (281)-809-5599.

Houston Immigration Lawyer Gasana has focused their practice on law applicable to family members of the green card holders or U.S. citizens, foreign skilled workers, U.S. employer and investor visa; waivers and deportation cases. Claudine Gasana is one of the Houston best immigration attorneys, Houston, TX top immigration lawyer in Houston. Her practice areas range from family green card solutions to a variety of non-immigrant work visas such as H1B, TN, F-1, and O-1 for legal cases in oil and gas, heathcare, higher education industries and more. Contact an experienced Houston Visa Lawyer or visit our immigration office today.

The information on this website is for general purposes only. Nothing on this site should be taken as legal advice for any individual case or situation. The reader should consult with a Licensed Attorney prior to filing for any petition as each individual case may be different.